Nieuw Amsterdam Ship Review

The Nieuw Amsterdam is Holland America's latest Signature-class ship, and is the fourth ship to bear the name. The ship sails Mediterranean itineraries in spring and summer, then moves on to the Caribbean for the winter months.

Terms and Conditions:The prices listed are representative of actual prices provided by various cruise vendors and are not offered by TravelAgeWest.com or Northstar Travel Media, LLC.
Price listed does not constitute a contract of services, implied or written.
TravelAgeWest.com provides no cruise booking or purchase features.
Prices are provided as a comparison tool only.
Prices listed are per person, based on double occupancy and do include port taxes.
Prices do not include taxes, fuel surcharges, gratuities, or airfare unless otherwise noted.
Actual prices and fees are subject to vendor policies and are subject to availability, are capacity-controlled, and are subject to change without notice.
Special amenities, prices, offers, and upgrades are based on select dates, ships, sailings, stateroom categories, and select fare codes.
Cancellation penalties, blackout dates, and other restrictions may apply.
All prices and dates may not be available at time of booking.

Main Deck Deck Plan

Nieuw Amsterdam Deck Plans:

Nieuw Amsterdam Photos

Photos & Videos

travel42 Professional Review for Nieuw Amsterdam

Want to read the full
Nieuw Amsterdam
travel42 Review?

travel42 features professionally written reviews of more than 300 cruise ships, 78 cruise lines and more than 3,000 hotels in nearly 200 popular cruise embarkation ports worldwide, plus 7,000 additional destination hotels. Visit www.travel-42.com or call 1.866.566.8136 to learn more about subscribing.

Holland America's Nieuw Amsterdam debuted in 2010 as part of the company's Signature class.

The 2,106-passenger ship is the cruise line's fourth to have the Nieuw Amsterdam name and the 11th to be named by a member of the Dutch royal family.

The first Nieuw Amsterdam launched in 1906 and used both a full set of sails and steam engines; the second, which entered service in 1938, was known as the "Darling of the Dutch." The silhouette of this ship can still be seen today behind Henry Hudson'...